A report generally should not be biased, so they should not use opinions, but instead they would use facts to sway to reader.
Answer:
It is a participial phrase.
Explanation:
A participial phrase contains a participial along with other words. So let's look at an example.
"Tidying up her desk for the day, Tina knew she could finally go home." The participial in this sentence is "tidying," and the rest of the words that go along with the participial "tidying" make up the participial phrase. Therefore we know the participial phrase in this sentence is "tidying up her desk for the day".
<span>plot . . . character i think but not for sure </span>
From the short story "Mother Tongue"written by Amy Tan: Growing up, Amy struggled with the feeling of being in two language zones; on the one hand she used the simple English with her mother, who spoke English in an unclear way , according to others, and on the other hand she used the English she learned at school which was more sophisticated. There were times when she felt embarrassed by her mother's use of English, especially when her friends could not understand what she was saying. But her mother knew English very well because she could read sophisticated books in English. It was only her delivery of the language that was lacking. Later in life, Amy came to accept the positive aspects that she learned from growing up in an immigrant family, from her mother, and be grateful for the teachings of her two worlds.
C. <span>Dad thought we should have hamburgers for the cookout; but Mom wanted chicken.
Final answer: c.
Because:- A semicolon separates two sentences. </span>